Talk:Talk: Ancestral Libations Pt II-Welsh Wool, Slavery and Identity with artist, Lucille Junkere

National Wool Museum
Finished

Lucille Junkere is a research-led visual artist whose work confronts Britain’s involvement in transatlantic chattel slavery and its continuing legacies of racism and the destruction of indigenous African knowledge systems. 


To celebrate her exhibition Welsh Wool, Slavery and Identity at the National Wool Museum, Lucille Junkere will be giving a talk about the exhibition. This is your chance to meet Lucille and find out more about her work in which she explores the role of Welsh plains in suppressing and denigrating the African identity of enslaved people, which was reinforced through textiles before colonialism. She uses masks and other artefacts to represent the Akan, Ashanti, Yorùbá, Igbo, Ibibio, Éwé and Bantu heritage of the people enslaved to work on Britain’s most lucrative plantation, Jamaica. Welsh flannel, wool remnants from blankets and throws, cotton, and Caribbean and West African natural dyes, including indigo, logwood, fustic, brazilwood and Kola nut, represent the traditional cultural cloth denied during slavery. 


This exhibition is part of Perspective(s) a collaborative project acknowledging culturally and ethnically diverse communities’ histories, perspectives, experiences, and stories.

Information

10 October 2025, 2pm
Cost Free
Suitability Adults
Booking Essential
Perspectives 6
Add to Outlook / Apple Calendar Add to Google Calendar

Hear more from Amgueddfa Cymru

We’re always working on new and exciting exhibitions and events – why not be among the first to hear about them?

Sign up to our newsletter

Your name and email address will be used solely for the purpose of sending you our monthly e-newsletter. If you have any questions about your data, how we use it please see our Privacy Notice

What's On